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http://www.newsweek.com/id/160119
Contact:
Jan Angilella FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
at
212-445-5638 Sunday, September 21, 2008
COVER:
KING HENRY
TREASURY
SECRETARY PAULSON ON TAXPAYER BAILOUT: 'IT'S VERY UNPLEASANT FOR ME, BUT IT'S A
LOT MORE ATTRACTIVE THAN THE ALTERNATIVE'
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THE
FORMER CEO OF GOLDMAN SACHS HAS EMERGED AS INVESTMENT BANKER IN CHIEF; SAYS
THERE WILL BE HOUSING AND MORTGAGE ISSUES FOR YEARS;
'THE
KEY IS TO GET STABILITY'
New York-Henry Paulson-free-market thinker,
former CEO of Goldman Sachs and Treasury secretary to a conservative Republican
president-was unveiling to the world a massive taxpayer bailout of the American
financial system, a message he never thought he'd have to deliver, reports
Senior Editor Daniel Gross in the current issue of Newsweek. Afterward, as he
headed into yet another weekend of nonstop work with his team, carrying the
weight of the troubled markets on his shoulders, the former college-football
star was clearly conflicted about what he'd just proposed. "It's very
unpleasant for me, but it's a lot more attractive than the alternative,"
Paulson tells Newsweek. "We can spend a lot of time talking about how it
happened and how we got here. But we have to get through the night first."
In the September 29 Newsweek cover,
"King Henry" (on newsstands Monday, September 22), Gross profiles Paulson, who came to Washington from Wall Street in
2006 expecting to deal with issues like Social Security reform and trade
agreements. At a time when President Bush seems to have largely checked out,
Gross reports, the teetotaling 62-year-old has emerged as the nation's most
powerful leader-the investment banker in chief. As he did on the Street, Paulson continues to advise CEOs on the
best course of action, to arrange financing and to get the best terms possible
for his clients. Only now his clients are American taxpayers, the president and
the global financial system.
While bailouts are regrettable and
expensive, Paulson argues that one is needed to restore confidence in the
system. "We're going to have housing issues and mortgage issues for
years," he tells Gross. "The key is to get stability." But
unlike other recent actions, this one will require greater cooperation from
Congress. And there Paulson is likely to run into some roadblocks.
Paulson
works at a pace to which Washington isn't quite accustomed. All month the staff
dining room at Treasury has remained open on weekends, with a buffet of tuna-fish
and peanut-butter sandwiches. Paulson doesn't use e-mail and prefers to get
information by phone. Staffers refer to him as a "serial dialer." But
he doesn't spend a lot of time making small talk. "He's a no-bulls--t kind
of guy," says Barney Frank,
chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. "He gets down to business and gets
things done."
This
brusqueness, and the desire to move on to the next problem, doesn't always go
over well on Capitol Hill. The criticism of Paulson has come mostly from
conservative Republicans in the House who are incensed over the bailouts.
"I think for all intents and purposes, Congress has been left out of the
loop and treated after the fact," says Rep. Scott Garrett, a New Jersey
Republican. Having already acquiesced to the creation of hundreds of billions
of dollars in potential taxpayer obligations, Congress isn't likely to just
hand over hundreds of billions more without demanding some concessions like
assistance for strapped homeowners.
The
decisions made on the fly these past several months will have impacts that last
deep into the next administration, long after the end of Paulson's
tenure-perhaps one of the most eventful of any Treasury secretary since
Alexander Hamilton.
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